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Films in Post-Taliban Afghanistan 2008 Bamyan Buddhas Mohsen Makhmalbaf's Safar é Gandehar (Kandahar) (Iran/France, 2001)
Nafas (Niloufar Pazira), a young Afghan journalist who has taken refuge in Canada during the time of the civil war with the Taleban, receives a desperate letter from her younger sister in Afghanistan, who writes that she has decided to end her life on the day before the coming eclipse of the sun. Dropping everything to hurry back Kandahar to save her sister, Nafas tries to enter Afghanistan by the way she had previously exited the country via the Niatak refugee camp at the Iran-Afghan border. It's here that the film really begins. In his treatise Mohsen Makhmalbaf opens with a warning comment: "If you read this article in full, it will take about an hour of your time. In this one hour, some 14 more people will have died in Afghanistan of war and hunger, and 60 others will have become refugees of Afghanistan in other countries. This article is intended to describe the reasons for this mortality and emigration. If this bitter subject is irrelevant to your sweet life, please avoid reading it." Why the reference to the destroyed Buddha statue in the title of the treatise? "I reached the conclusion that the statue of Buddha was not demolished by anybody. It fell down out of shame out of shame for the world's ignorance towards Afghanistan. It broke down knowing its greatness didn't do any good." More than likely, Makhmalbaf's decision to give flesh-and-blood to statistics by introducing the motif of desperation shared by the separated sisters stems from a personal experience. "Since the day I saw a little 12-year-old Afghan girl the same age as my own daughter Hana fluttering in my arms of hunger, I've tried to bring forth the tragedy of this hunger. But I've always ended up giving statistics. Why have I become so powerless!" When Makhmalbaf arrived in Kandahar with a small team, after months of wrangling with the Pakistan authorities (who had represented at that time Afghan's diplomatic interests abroad) to obtain the necessary visas, even the veteran filmmaker was taken back by the enormity of his task. "I never forget those nights during the filming. While our team searched the deserts with flashlights, we would see dying refugees left in the desert like herds of sheep. When we took those whom we thought were dying of cholera to hospitals in Zabol, we realized they were dying of hunger. Since those days and nights of seeing so many people starving the death, I haven't been able to forgive myself for eating any meals." As for the imminent dangers of shooting in a country that doesn't tolerate images of any kind, Makhmalbaf could draw upon his own experiences of making another film on an Afghan theme: Bicycleran (The Cyclist) (1988), shot in Peshawar. "I remember the day I was arrested and handcuffed." And although friends and colleagues warned him to be careful on the Kandahar project, because of threats of kidnapping and terrorism at the borders, "I kept saying my subject was humanitarian and not political." Even that turned out to be an illusion: "One day, when we were finished filming at the border, I came across a group that have come either to kill or kidnap me. They asked me about Makhmalbaf. I was sporting a long thin beard and wearing Afghan dress. A Massoudi hat. with a shawl covering it and half of my face, made me look like an Afghan. I sent them the other way and began to run. I cannot figure whether they had been dispatched by a political group or sent by smugglers to extort money." The film finished, Mohsen Makhmalbaf expressed his doubts on "why I made that film or wrote these notes? I don't know, but 'the heart has reasons that the mind is unaware of,' as Pascal put it." Kandahar was awarded the Ecumenical Prize at Cannes. Later, a critic at Time magazine voted Kandahar among the top 100 films of all time. From an historical viewpoint, Kandahar also had a prophetic ring. Four months after its premiere at Cannes, on 11 September 2001, the attack on the World Trade Center in New York shocked the world. In turn, that terrorist attack led to a NATO military offensive in the following October and the eventual downfall of the Taliban in Afghanistan. Their unpopular reign of repression had lasted five years, from 1996 to December of 2001. Beginning in 2002, Afghan men were now free to play chess in public, women could go the market without a male escort, boys could fly kites again, and girls were allowed to attend school. Michael Winterbottom's In This World (UK, 2002)
That the film was shot with a digital camera (Marcel Zyskind) on actual locations added to the immediacy of the fateful journey, but its sound recording (Stuart Wilson) could send chills up your spine when the boys are confined in a container in the dark hold of a freighter. Programmed on the second day of the festival, In This World set the tone for the entire Berlinale as "a statement for peace" that was to rise to a crescendo when a half-million Berliners turned out on the closing day of the festival to march through the Brandenburg Gate in an anti-war demonstration. The film follows the perilous journey of teenagers Jamal and Enayatulla from the Peshawar refugee camp in Afghanistan on the Silk Road towards Britain, a route for drug and people smugglers. Along the way the pair travel in pick-up trucks, on crowded buses, and in an airless container. Although their odyssey is across landscapes of raw, maimed beauty Marcel Zyskind's camera shows us debris littered roads at sunrise, sun-scorched deserts and rocks during the day, murky mountain passes at night the boys scarcely have time to notice, so disorientated yet determined are they in their commitment to get somewhere, anywhere. Generally recognized as Michael Winterbottom's best film, In This World was also awarded the Peace Prize and Ecumenical Prize at the Berlinale. And the film accurately took the pulse of the times. A month later, in March of 2003, the invasion of Iraq by American and Allied Forces began. Makhmalbaf Film House
Keeping up with the Makhmalbaf film-family tree father Mohsen Makhmalbaf, mother Merziyeh Meshkini, daughter Samira, son Maysam, and another daughter Hana has become a must for critics, festival directors, and cineastes deep into Iranian and Afghan cinema. Their regular presence at key international film festivals Cannes, Venice, Berlin, Locarno, San Sebastian Karlovy Vary, Moscow, Toronto, New York was jump-started at the 2000 Pusan International Film Festival when a retrospective titled "Salaam Cinema! Films of the Makhmalbaf Family" sparked international interest. In particular, that retro caught the eye of Kiril Masgalov, artistic director of the Moscow festival, who promptly booked it for his own 2001 event. In addition to the dozen films in the Moscow tribute, there was time set aside for an in-depth "conversation" with Mohsen Makhmalbaf on his literary output: novels, short stories, journalist tracts, theses on Islamic art and theatre, and more. But at the last minute the tribute unfortunately hit a snag: according to reports, the Russian government failed to issue the necessary visas in time for the entire Makhmalbaf family. With some 25 shorts, documentaries, and features to his name, Mohsen Makhmalbaf is recognized in Iran and abroad as an authentic film revolutionary. Born 1957 in Tehran, he was thrown into prison at 17 for five years for resisting the Shah regime. Set free after the Revolution, he published a novel, several short stories, and directed his first film, Tobeh Nosuh (Nosuh's Repentance) (1982). With the success of his neorealist Dastforoush (The Peddler) (1987) and Bicycleran (The Cyclist) (1988), the latter about an Afghan refugee in Iran and the forerunner of Safar é Ghandehar (Kandahar), Makhmalbaf found himself increasingly in conflict with Islamic authorities. His Nobat e Asheghi (Time of Love1990), programmed in the Un Certain Regard section at Cannes, was banned for "deviant religious views" at home. Thereafter, Mohsen Makhmalbaf became a regular at Cannes: Salaam Cinema (1995), Gabbeh (1996), The Door episode in the portmanteau film Ghessé hayé kish (Kish Tales) (1999), and Kandahar (2001). But he also premiered Nun va Goldoon (A Moment of Innocence) (1996) at Locarno and competed at Venice with Sokout (The Silence) (1998). In addition, he wrote the scripts for Samira Makhmalbaf's Sib (The Apple) (1998), the debut feature of his 18-year-old daughter selected for the Un Certain Regard at Cannes, followed by Takhté siah (Blackboards) (2000), in the Competition and awarded the Prix de Jury. Also, he wrote the script for Merziyeh Meshkini's Roozi ke zan shodam (The Day I Became a Woman) (2000), his wife's awarded Venice entry. The best illustration on how the family members are interlinked on mutual productions can be found in Maysam Makhmalbaf's Samira cheghoneh takté siah rol sakht (How Samira Made Blackboards) (2000), a brother's view of why his sister left school to work as an assistant for their father and learn firsthand the art of cinema and the craft of filmmaking. This was only possible because the Makhmalbaf Film House functioned as a film school as well as a clearing house for information on the family's film productions. Hana Makhmalbaf the youngest member of the family joined the circle of filmmakers at Makhmalbaf Film House at the tender age of ten. The story goes that she picked up a video camera as a play-toy and, with the help of her father and brother, shot Rouzi keh khalam mariz bood (The Day My Aunt Was Ill) (1998) whereupon this 26-minute short film about "playing with a camera" was invited to Locarno and Pusan. In 2002, the 14-year-old Hana accompanied her sister Samira to Afghanistan to shoot Lezate divanegi (Joy of Madness) (2003), a chronicle of how Samira had casted nonprofessional actors for Panj é asr (At Five in the Afternoon) (2003). When the film was invited to the 2003 Venice festival to compete in the Opera Prima section, Hana was nearly forbidden to appear in person at the premiere of Joy of Madness because Italian law forbade minors from attending unrated films. Samira Makhmalbaf's Panj é asr (At Five in the Afternoon) (Iran/France, 2003)
In Pan é asr (At Five in the Afternoon), Samira Makhmalbaf picks up where her father had left off two years before at Cannes with Safar é Gandehar (Kandahar). In At Five in the Afternoon, photographed by Ebrahim Ghafori, Afghan refugees have crossed the borders from Iran and Pakistan to return to their former homes in post-Taliban Afghanistan. Among these is a young woman, Nogreh (Agheleh Rezaïe), who returns to Kabul accompanied by her father and mother. Sent to a religious school in her blue burqa, Nogreh slips away "at five in the afternoon" to discard her head-covering and don a pair of high-heeled shoes. She wants to hear the music long forbidden by Taliban rules. And she wants to breathe the fresh air of a liberated society. When she meets a poet in the streets, she proclaims her secret desire to become the "president of the country." Meanwhile, her father, steeped in religious ways and traditions, is horrified at the "blasphemy" he encounters in Kabul particularly the appearance of unveiled women in the streets. Finally, he can stand no more. Together with his family, which now includes the sick baby of his step-daughter, he flees into the desert. At Five in the Afternoon was awarded the Prix de Jury at Cannes and the Ecumenical Prize. But the story of the Makhmalbaf Film House doesn't end there. While Iranian cameraman Ebrahim Ghafori was working with Samira Makhmalbaf on At Five in the Afternoon in Afghanistan, he was approached by Afghan director Sedigh Barmak, who asked him to shoot Osama, the first Afghan feature film made in the country since the war. Both films were invited to the 2003 Cannes film festival, At Five in the Afternoon in the Competition and Osama in the Directors Fortnight. Sedigh Barmak's Osama (Afghanistan/Japan/Ireland, 2003)
As for the film's title, it refers to the name given to a 12-year-old girl to hide her female identity in order to find employment to support her family since the death of her father and older brother. For a time, her disguise works until the religious police force people to attend the noon prayer in the mosques. Since she is not familiar with the prayer formalities, she is sent to the religious school at Madrassa, which is also the center for military training under the Taliban. It's there that her true identity is discovered. Taken to a judicial court, the sentence of death by stoning is set aside in her case because an old mullah would like to take her for his fourth wife. How Sedigh Barmak found his young nonprofessional to play the role of Osama makes for a story as good as the movie itself. One day, on a Kabul street, a young girl in tattered clothes approached him to beg for money. Her eyes caught his attention, and he asked her what made her so sad. Marina Golbahari responded that when she thought about her sisters, who had died during the war, she just started to cry. Then, when Barmak offered her the role, she felt he was just joking. "I just thought he was trying to make me feel better." Screened in the Directors Fortnight at the 2003 Cannes festival, Osama received a Special Mention by the Caméra d'Or Jury. Sedigh Barmak, born 1962 in Afghanistan, studied cinema at the Moscow Film School (VGIK), where he made a number of student films. Graduating in 1987, he returned to Afghanistan and was put in charge of the Afghan Film Studio. His two short films, The Disaster of Withering (1988) and The Hadith of Conquer (1991), were not only banned when the Taliban took control of Kabul, but hundreds of meters of addition film footage at the studio were also destroyed by radical clerics. Escaping to Pakistan, Sedigh Barmak made the acquaintance of Ebrahim Ghafuri, the cameraman on Mohsen Makhmalbaf's Kandahar and Samira Makhmalbaf's At 5 in the Afternoon, who agreed to be the cinematographer on Osama. Currently Barmak manages the Afghan Children's Education Movement (ACEM), an agency in Kabul to promote literacy, culture, and art. Mohsen Makhmalbaf has also taught there. Atiq Rahimi's Khakestar-o-khak (Earth and Ashes / Terre et cendres) (France/Afghanistan, 2004)
A poetic fable about loss and redemption, endurance and the human spirit, Earth and Ashes underscores how humanity can persevere even when confronted with the bitter atrocities of war. Dastaguir, an old man, sits on the side of a road with his mute grandson Yassin at his side. The road seems to lead to nowhere in the distance are mountains, nearby a partially destroyed bridge over a dried-up river bed. Down the road is a mine that Dastaguir needs to reach, although he dreads the possibility. He has undertaken the journey to find his son, Yassin's father, who works in the mine. And he brings with him a searing message: the old man's village has been bombed and most of their family killed, including the boy's mother. Torn between grief and a code of honor, Dastaguir encounters strangers on the wayside, each encounter serving as a metaphor on conditions both during and after the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. Shot in present-day Afghanistan, the film is packed with symbolic references: a grouchy guard at his sentry post. a shell of a tank, a veiled woman mourning the loss of home and husband, a tradesman babbling philosophical nonsense. All, to one degree or another, are beaten-down victims of the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, coupled by a destructive civil war that brought the Taliban to power. This November, Atiq Rahimi was awarded the prestigious Goncourt prize for his new novel, Syngue Sabour, Persian for Stone of Patience. The story of a woman caring for her invalid husband, who has suffered brain damage from a war-wound, its title again serves as a metaphor: it refers to a Persian folktale about a black stone that absorbs the distress of anyone who embraces it. Given Atiq Rahimi's proven record at Cannes, Stone of Patience may well be his next film project. Christian Frei's Im Tal der grossen Buddhas (The Giant Buddhas) (Switzerland, 2005) Even more fascinating is the decision by the director to accompany a Strasbourg professor on his search to find a third Buddha, one said to be buried underground and believed to be 300 meters long in a reclining position. An engrossing and questioning documentary, The Giant Buddhas shows the callous approach by the media to the sensational side of the news while overlooking the plight of Islamic peoples, in Afghanistan and around the globe, who lamented this philistine act. Programmed on opening night at Leipzig DOKfestival, The Giant Buddhas was a recurring attraction throughout the week not surprising when one considers that among the contributors to the film's musical score were Philip Glass and Arvo Pärt. Hana Makhmalbaf's Buda az sharm foru rikht (Buddha Collapsed Out of Shame) (Iran/France, 2007) In Hana Makhmalbaf's Buddha Collapsed Out of Shame a poor 6-year-old girl named Bakhtay lives with her family in one of the old monastery caves. When told that a girls' school has opened on the other side of the river, she wants to attend so that she can learn to read and write. But since her mother is rather indifferent to the idea, she must find a way to barter eggs for pen and paper. Worse, she has to suffer the humiliation of submitting to brutal prisoner-of-war games played by neighborhood boys whenever she tries to cross the river. Her plight reflects the reality of an illiterate Afghan society blunted by the scars of war and suppress of the human spirit. In an interview on the film's moral message, Hana Makhmalbaf spoke in no uncertain terms about how "the children of this country have learnt violence by witnessing some of the harshest ones happening to their relatives in front of their eyes. They have witnessed their fathers being beheaded in their gardens in front of their eyes. The irony is that even those who had come to rescue Afghanistan, first destroyed it, then didn't find time to rebuild it, until the next so-called 'rescue group' came along and went through the same destruction and violence, again and again and again. First, the Russian communists came, then the Taliban showed up, and now the Americans are here. They all had one thing in common violence." Marc Forster's The Kite Runner (USA, 2007)
Set in the 1970s, before the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, The Kite Runner is the story of Amir, a well-to-do Pashtun boy, and Hassan, his Hazzara friend, who also happens to be the son of the household servant. The twist in the story comes when Amir witnesses the brutal rape of Hassan by a local tough and does nothing to come to his aid. Indeed, his shame is so great that he finds a way to expel father and son from the house on a trumped-up theft charge. Years later, as a grown man and successful writer, Amir is forced to face his guilty conscience when a family secret is revealed to him by a dying acquaintance. It necessitates a return to Kabul. The story doesn't end there, however. Efforts on the part of a distributor to release the film in Afghanistan met with protests and a threatened ban. Not only was the rape scene considered morally offensive (although presented impressionistically on the screen), but the tensions between Pashtuns and the Hazzara were also reviewed as a rehash of ancient conflicts between the wealthy and the underprivileged. One should also note that since movie theaters had been destroyed under Taliban rule, the Afghan audience was generally unprepared for adult cinema fare of this nature. The upshot? The boy actors had to be spirited out of the country for their own safety. 15 Afghanistan Documentaries (2006-2008)
Arguably, the most important documentary in the series was Abdul Hassain Danesh's Gozar gah (Passageway) (2006). Work on this 52-minute Afghan chronicle began back in 1993, when a raging civil war reaped more destruction on Kabul than by the Taliban afterwards. Later, when Danesh left Afghanistan for Iran, he assembled his footage into Passageway, which has yet to be screened in Afghanistan in its original version simply because many of the political leaders of the 1990s are back in power again today. Of course, there was a documentary set against the background of the destroyed Buddha statues: Ghulan Reza Mohammadi's Buddha, dukhtarak wa ab (Buddha, the Girl and Water) (2006) details the work-day of a young girl before the gaping niche where the Buddha statues once stood. By contrast, Reza Hosseini Yamak's Bulbul (Bulbul The City Bird) (2008) another documentary on child labor, chronicles the routines of a young lad named young Bulbul (Sparrow) who, together with two companions, washes passing cars at street intersections in Kabul. A contrasting view of Kabul was then offered in Dil Afruz Zeerak's A Day in the Life of Rahela (2006), about a 13-year-old girl daily hauling canisters of water up a hillside in order to help support her family and pay for her schooling. Another and more promising view of child labor is seen in Taj Mohammad Baktari's Sahar javani qalin baf (Sahar, the Young Carpet Maker) (2008), about an intelligent 14 year-old girl who combines her schooling with managing the family's business of making portrait-carpets based on photos. The series opened with Wahid Nazir's My Kabul (2006), a portrait of city life viewed through the eyes of a talkative taxi driver struggling to make ends meet with his rickety jalopy. The film contrasts sharply with Ibrahim Bamiani's Roja roshani (Dream of Light) (2006), where we see 1969 archival footage of Kabul bathed in glittering light on the 50th anniversary of Afghan independence. Today, after seven years of foreign input by aid workers and consulting firms, power is a scarce item in the city. The day-to-day hardships suffered by Afghan women were treated with insight and compassion in two documentaries by director-camerawoman Shakiba Adil. In A Girl from Kabul (2007) a young women seeks to reconcile her thirst for social independence with the repressive forces that traditionally hinder the equality of the sexes. In Manija Gardizi and Karim Amin's Moral Crimes (2007) the focus is on women inmates in the Mazar+Sharif prison, women who were betrayed by their families for standing on their rights to marry on their own initiative. Afghan feminists and Islamic jurists speak out on seeking means to reconcile Sharia traditions with modern civil law. And in Kahia Did Stand Up (2008) the focus is on the murder of Zakia Zaki, the founder of an independent women's radio station who paid with her life for her outspoken convictions. Along the same lines, Afghan woman filmmaker Alka Sadat chronicles in Dar dhakataye ka nagesol aglam medanand (Half Value Life) (2008) the courage of a woman states attorney in her fight for women's rights. Although a wife and mother with obligations at home, Mariya Bashir finds ways to combine her domestic duties with her job as an investigating attorney. She has already survived one attack on her life. Back-to-back documentaries by young women Afghan filmmakers raised relevant questions about traditions and modernity. In her Va man zani tanhaa dar astaneye fasli sard (Behold a Woman Alone at the Beginning of a Cold Season) (2006) Sahraa Karimi confronts her life in Europe as a film director by speaking directly into the camera about the loneliness of celebrating her 23rd birthday when there is no one from the family to blow out the candles with her. Now freed of the burqa, the full-bodied veil, but with images in her head of home where war is raging again, she attempts to measure the pros and cons of her double-identity. And in Tar e-tu, pud-e-man (Mesh) (2008) 23-year-old Aarzoo Burhani examines the question why some women still prefer to wear the burqa in public, although this is no longer compulsory since the fall of the Taliban regime. Besides touching on the rift between the older and younger generation, she states with clarity that she could nothing about the burqa in Kabul history. Last, but not least, two Afghan animation films were standouts as well. In Sayed Mohsen Hossaini's Shelter (2006) the filmmaker's own drawings are animated to tell the story of a small boy living in a cart. And in Sayed Alireza Sajjadi's Akherin fariad (The Last Shout) (2008) a love story between two matchsticks delivers a subtle metaphorical meaning when the matchsticks kiss, something quite impossible in public life. When The Last Shout was presented at this year's Kabul Film Festival, it triggered a hefty discussion among the audience. Some in the audience viewed it as an affront to the prevailing moral code.
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